At noon on March 18, 2021, the National Center for Access to Justice in partnership with the Fordham Law School will host a Mayoral Candidates’ Forum on the civil justice crisis in New York City.

The leading candidates, in the heat of this year’s campaign, will be invited to explain how — as the City’s next Mayor — each intends to respond to the growing wave of evictions, debt collections, family disputes, and other civil legal problems that the pandemic is causing and has exacerbated. These crises are overturning the lives of New Yorkers and expected to increase in number and in harm in the months ahead.

The participating candidates are:  Eric Adams, Shaun Donovan, Kathryn Garcia, Ray McGuire, Carlos Menchaca, Dianne Morales, Scott Stringer, Maya Wiley, and Andrew Yang. The moderator will be Bill Ritter, television news anchor and journalist with WABC TV Channel 7, and ABC News correspondent for 20/20. The event will be streamed on zoom and simulcast on WABC.

Join us at NCAJ and Fordham Law for this important conversation. To receive the zoom link, register at the on-line invitation. To sign up for NCAJ’s periodic news posts on access to justice, subscribe here.

The NCAJ uses data, research, policy analysis and advocacy to expose how the justice system fails to stand up for equal justice and, all too often, functions as a source of oppression. Our work is rooted in the principle that all people should enjoy access to justice — the meaningful opportunity to be heard, secure one’s rights and obtain the law’s protection. We are working to bring rigorous, principled research and analysis to the task of advancing progress toward a fairer justice system, and in so doing, to achieve a better society. Visit NCAJ.org.

Recent Articles

Watch the Videos from NCAJ's Access to Justice Solutions Symposium of February 9, 2024

On February 9th, 2024, more than 500 peopled gathered or tuned in via stream to the AtJ Solutions Symposium. The sessions were videotaped that day. If you'd like to re-see what you saw, or see the sessions for the first time, you can do so at the links, below. Take a look, consider the progress of the access to justice movement, and join in the work to increase access to justice in America.

Update: View the Video from Webinar Introducing NCAJ's New Consumer Debt Litigation Index and Two Additional New Tools for Increasing Fairness in Consumer Debt Litigation

Update: View the Webinar (link below) from March 14, 2024, when NCAJ joined the Center for Public Health Law Research of Temple University Beasley School of Law and the National Consumer Law Center for NCLC's national webinar introducing these organizations' three new tools for increasing fairness in consumer debt litigation.

New “Consumer Debt Litigation Index” Ranks States on Best Policies for Access to Justice

The National Center for Access to Justice (NCAJ) at Fordham Law School today announced the release of the Consumer Debt Litigation Index, an on-line resource that demonstrates that every U.S. state and the District of Columbia lack essential legal standards to protect consumers from wrongful, abusive debt collection tactics that can lead to homelessness, family breakup, overwhelming stress and other devastating consequences for families and individuals. There are signs of progress and many states are trying to improve, but every state has a long way to go.